Abstract

This paper examines the relationship between women's education and their empowerment, using six waves of the nationally representative Kenya Demographic Health Surveys (KDHS). We utilize the change in the educational system in 1985 as a source of positive exogenous shock. We particularly focus on women who were exposed to the new regime and how their exposure status affects their perceptions and practices in decision making. The Ordinary Least Squares regression (OLS) results indicate an increase in education for women exposed to this reform, followed by the delay in their age at first birth, a reduction in female genital mutilation practice on their eldest daughters, a decrease in sexual domestic violence, and enhancement in their household decision making. Media exposure, partners' characteristics, and wealth endowment are the possible pathways through which women's empowerment is achieved.

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